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Anemia, Sickle Cell clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01411280 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Ameliorating Attention Problems in Children With Sickle Cell Disease (SCD)

Start date: June 2006
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess whether methylphenidate is effective in enhancing the cognitive performance of children with the HbSS or HbSC genotype of SCD who have sustained neurological complications on laboratory-based measures of sustained attention, reaction time, and executive functions, and indirectly, verbal short-term and long-term memory.

NCT ID: NCT01389024 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Hydroxyurea to Prevent Brain Injury in Sickle Cell Disease

HUPrevent
Start date: August 16, 2012
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a pilot study of hydroxyurea versus placebo to reduce central nervous system complications (abnormally fast blood flow to the brain, silent cerebral infarct or stroke) in young children with sickle cell disease. The investigators plan to identify children 12 to 48 months old without central nervous system complications and randomly assign 20 to treatment with hydroxyurea and 20 to treatment with placebo for 36 months. Neither the study doctors nor the participants will know which treatment they are receiving.

NCT ID: NCT01380197 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Choosing Opioid Management for Pain and Analyzing Acute Chest Syndrome (ACS) Rates Equally

COMPARE
Start date: May 26, 2010
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The pathophysiology of sickle cell disease (SCD) manifestations, are complex with interactions of intracellular hemoglobin, membrane and endothelial activation but the hallmark remains recurrent and painful vaso-occlusive episodes (VOC). These painful episodes are thought to result from ischemia caused when small blood vessels are occluded by misshapen, inflexible erythrocytes. Painful episodes are the most common cause of hospitalization, morbidity, and impairment for SCD patients. There is no therapy that completely prevents or directly aborts painful events for all patients. Consequently, treatment for acute VOC is primarily supportive using hydration and medicinal pain control. Every pain medication has the potential to relieve pain but is associated with significant limitations and side effects. The primary hypothesis to be tested in this double blind, randomized controlled trial is that Nalbuphine is equivalent to morphine for pain control and patients will suffer fewer episodes of acute chest syndrome. The investigators also expect subjects will report fewer side effects from respiratory depression, abdominal distention from reduced peristalsis, reduced histamine release causing pruritis and still be provided adequate pain control. Further hypotheses to be tested is ability to recruit patient participants while being treated in the Emergency Department and that continuous infusion of Nalbuphine with accompanying patient controlled analgesia (PCA) is safe and effective in controlling pain, requiring less total opiates consumption, while decreasing length of hospitalization.

NCT ID: NCT01375608 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Decitabine for High-Risk Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: June 2011
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Background: - In sickle cell disease (SCD), the proteins in the red blood cells that carry oxygen do not behave normally. In parts of the body where there are low levels of oxygen or where oxygen is used more, the sickle hemoglobin proteins may change shape and stick together. This causes the red cells to clump, which reduces blood flow. This leads to even lower oxygen levels and causes damage and/or pain. - One way to stop the red blood cells from sticking together is to increase the levels of fetal (baby or good ) hemoglobin. The good hemoglobin then takes the place of the sickle hemoglobin. - Hydroxyurea is the only approved drug for SCD. But hydroxyurea works in only about two-thirds of people with SCD. Even in those cases it sometimes stops working over time. - Researchers are interested in testing decitabine. The drug may help to increase fetal hemoglobin levels. But it has not yet been approved to treat SCD. Objectives: - To test the safety and effectiveness of decitabine in increasing fetal hemoglobin levels and improving the symptoms of sickle cell disease. Eligibility: - People at least 18 years of age who have sickle cell disease that has not improved after at least 6 months of hydroxyurea therapy. Those who cannot take hydroxyurea because of side effects may also participate. Design: - Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. They will also have blood and urine tests, a lung function test, and other tests as required. - Participants will receive decitabine injections up to twice a week for 1 year. Depending on the response to treatments, the dose will remain the same or be reduced to once a week. - Participants will be monitored with frequent blood tests and other studies as directed by the study doctors. - After the study is completed, participants will go back to their usual sickle cell care. If decitabine has improved a participant's SCD, treatment may be continued under regular health coverage insurance if this can be arranged.

NCT ID: NCT01369160 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Curative Versus Disease-Modifying Therapies in Children With Severe Sickle Cell Disease

SCD_Cross
Start date: May 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The research proposed is a pilot study of pediatric and adolescent/young adult patients who have received the curative intervention (MSD-SCT), disease-modifying interventions (HU or CT) or SCC (control), with respect to three clinically important outcomes: quality-of-life (QOL), neurocognitive function, and reproductive potential. Comparable cohorts will be identified for each of the groups, drawing from patients treated by the SCD program of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA). QOL measures and neuropsychiatric testing and will be administered. Reproductive endocrine function markers (laboratory studies and pubertal staging), will be collected and analyzed. A tracking system of such patients will also be developed, gathering available retrospective data and setting up a mechanism for collection of new data.

NCT ID: NCT01356485 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Safety Study of MP4CO in Adult Sickle Cell Patients

Start date: January 2012
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Sickle Cell Anemia is caused by an inherited hemoglobin disorder. Healthy red blood cells are discoid and can deform and move through small blood vessels to carry oxygen to all parts of the body. In sickle cell disease, as red blood cells circulate and oxygen is released in the circulatory system, the deoxygenated abnormal hemoglobin S can begin to polymerize. When this occurs, the red blood cells can become sticky and elongated. These sickled red blood cells are less flexible and will obstruct small blood vessels and block normal red blood cells from traveling through the circulatory system, which limits oxygen delivery to tissues and organs. This is known as a "sickle crisis". Patients suffering from a sickle crisis experience severe pain and are at risk of stroke, heart attack or even death. By lowering the level of oxygen pressure at which sickling occurs and opening the vasculature and rapidly delivering oxygen directly to ischemic tissues, the addition of MP4CO to existing treatment protocols may alleviate pain associated with a sickle cell crisis, abort a crisis and/or potentially reduce the duration of a crisis. This could mean less time in the hospital and an improved quality of life for patients with sickle cell anemia.

NCT ID: NCT01340404 Completed - Clinical trials for Cerebrovascular Accident

Allogeneic Genoidentical Stem Cell Transplantation in Children With Sickle-cell Anemia and Cerebral Vasculopathy

DREPAGREFFE
Start date: December 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to demonstrate that cerebral velocities assessed by transcranial doppler (TCD) are more significantly decreased by SCT than by long-term transfusion program A multicenter, national, non-randomized, prospective study of paired cohort will be conducted, with 2 groups of exposed (SCT) and non-exposed (TP) patients.

NCT ID: NCT01331148 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

High Dose Vitamin D for Sickle Cell Disease

SCD-VitD
Start date: February 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Vitamin D deficiency (VDD) is very common among African American adolescents and adults in the US, ten times higher than is seen in Caucasians. VDD is also quite common in sickle cell disease (SCD). Both VDD and SCD can cause chronic pain, compression fractures, and muscle weakness. The investigators believe VDD may contribute to poor musculoskeletal health and chronic pain seen in pediatric SCD. In this study, the investigators aim to show that children and adolescents with SCD and chronic pain have lower levels of vitamin D compared to those without chronic pain. The investigators also aim to determine the clinical characteristics in SCD patients related to their vitamin D status. About 60 subjects (7 to 21 years old) will be enrolled on this study, 30 with chronic pain and 30 without chronic pain. The investigators will assess baseline characteristics including vitamin D levels, bone turnover rates (measured by C telopeptide blood levels [CTx]), markers of inflammation and oxidative stress levels in blood, baseline hemoglobin and other laboratory parameters, presence of abnormal bones on chest x-ray, pulmonary function, opioid analgesic use, overall muscle strength, quality of life and depression. To evaluate the impact of vitamin D replacement on these baseline characteristics, the investigators will randomize subjects to receive either placebo or high dose vitamin D for 6 weeks after which time the investigators will evaluate overall vitamin D status, muscle and bone health, depression, quality of life, pain status and use of opioid pain medications, inflammation and oxidative status comparing before and after treatment with high dose vitamin D. The investigators will give-at no cost to subjects-a daily supplement that will provide the recommended daily allowance of calcium and vitamin D that contains 500mg Calcium and 200IU vitamin D to subjects throughout the study period. Subjects will be in the study for 7 months and have five to six study visits.

NCT ID: NCT01322269 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

A Study of HQK-1001 in Patients With Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: April 2011
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of three dose levels of HQK-1001 administered once daily for 26 weeks in subjects with sickle cell disease.

NCT ID: NCT01319448 Completed - Malaria Clinical Trials

Intermittent Preventive Treatment for Malaria in Patient With Sickle Cell Disease

Start date: September 2011
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Malaria prophylaxis is recommended for sickle cell disease patients. In Nigeria, daily proguanil or weekly pyrimethamine are the most commonly prescribed regimens, but the current policy is not effective due to poor compliance and drug resistance. Intermittent treatment with a long acting drug regimen administered under supervision at clinic visits may be more effective. The aim of this trial is to compare the tolerability and acceptability of supervised bimonthly treatment with either sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine plus amodiaquine (SP+AQ) or mefloquine plus artesunate (MQ+AS), with the daily proguanil. Two hundred and seventy patients with sickle cell disease attending the paediatric sickle cell disease clinic in Ilorin hospital who meet the eligibility criteria and have parental consent, will be randomized to one of three prophylactic regimens: daily proguanil, bimonthly sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine plus amodiaquine, or bimonthly mefloquine plus artesunate. Patients will be asked to return to clinic every two months and whenever they are sick. At enrollment, the study paediatrician will conduct a physical examination of the child, and collect a venous blood sample for a complete blood cell count and biochemical screen, determination of G6PD genotype, preparation of blood smears for malaria microscopy and a blood spot for determination of molecular markers of resistance. Four days after each clinic visit, patients will be interviewed (by phone and, for a subset, at home or in the clinic) to ask about compliance and adverse events. Participants will be followed for one year. The parents or carer will be encouraged to bring their child to the Outpatient Department clinic if the child becomes unwell. The primary outcome of the trial is tolerability, secondary outcomes are adherence to the regimen, and incidence of malaria and the number of hospitalizations over 12 months. If the bimonthly regimens are well tolerated and the preliminary data from this study are promising, a larger multicentre trial will be required to determine efficacy.